Brindisi-Class Light Cruiser: Difference between revisions

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|Ship sensors          ={{Unbulleted list|Type 128 ASDIC|Type 279 early-warning radar}}
|Ship sensors          ={{Unbulleted list|Type 128 ASDIC|Type 279 early-warning radar}}
|Ship EW              =
|Ship EW              =
|Ship armament        ={{Unbulleted list|'''Guns:'''|10 × [[Cacertian 150mm RN-QF Naval Gun|150mm RN-QFI guns]] (5 × 2)|'''Anti-aircraft:'''|8 × 40mm RN-DPII guns (4 × 2)|4 × [[Vitali MG50 Heavy Machine Gun|MG50 machine guns]]|'''Other:'''|6 × 540mm torpedo tubes}}
|Ship armament        ={{Unbulleted list|'''Guns:'''|10 × [[Cacertian 150mm RN-QF Naval Gun|150mm RN-QFI guns]] (5 × 2)|'''Anti-aircraft:'''|8 × 40mm RN-AAIII guns (4 × 2)|4 × [[Vitali MG50 Heavy Machine Gun|MG50 machine guns]]|'''Other:'''|6 × 540mm torpedo tubes}}
|Ship notes            =
|Ship notes            =
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 23:59, 6 January 2022

BrindisiClassLightCruiser.png
Class overview
Name: Brindisi-class light cruiser
Builders: Royal Shipbuilders of Cacerta
Operators: CRNEnsign.png Cacertian Royal Navy
Preceded by: Cagoa-class
Succeeded by: Savina-class
In commission: 1927 – 1943
Planned: 12
Completed: 12
Lost: 3
Retired: 9
General characteristics
Type: Light cruiser
Displacement:
  • 5,610 tons standard
  • 5,863 tons fully loaded
Length: 156 meters
Beam: 15.4 meters
Draft: 5 meters
Propulsion:
  • 4 × CNRC steam turbines
  • 4 × 3-drum boilers
  • 4 × shafts each driving three-bladed propellers
Speed: 32.5 knots (60.2 km/h)
Range: 4,850 nautical miles at 11 knots
Complement: 487 officers and crew
Sensors and
processing systems:
  • Type 128 ASDIC
  • Type 279 early-warning radar
Armament:

The Brindisi-class was the first class of light cruisers built for the Cacertian Royal Navy in the aftermath of the Divide War and subsequent reevaluation of Cacertian naval doctrine. They were designed specifically as a class of protection cruiser that would work with lighter destroyers to screen fleet elements and perform reconnaissance. By comparison to pervious cruiser designs, the Brindisi-class was considered a major improvement.

During the Siduri War, it was common for the ships of the class to work independently as fleet raiders, many operating out of the Empire’s naval base in Andria and bounding far from port to attack Syaran commerce. The 150mm RN-QFI guns that made up the primary armament of the Brindisi-class were surprisingly effective as both a surface and anti-aircraft weapon; later improved versions of the QFI were later implemented across the entire navy both as primary and secondary weapons.

A total of twelve ships were completed, three of which were lost in combat operations during the Siduri War. The remaining nine were later decommissioned in 1943 and eventually scrapped.

Design

Armament

Armor

Propulsion

Construction

Service History

Current Status

Units

# Designation Name Shipyard Laid down Launched Commissioned Status Commanding Officer
I CL-Br-001 Brindisi N/A
II CL-Br-002 Messigola
III CL-Br-003 Vefplio
IV CL-Br-004 Metatsini
V CL-Br-005 Starmi
VI CL-Br-006 Amancamento
VII CL-Br-007 Panorini
VIII CL-Br-008 Senice
IX CL-Br-009 Astucia
X CL-Br-010 Fuves
XI CL-Br-011 Vigesaro
XII CL-Br-012 Morfu